Contents

United States

The following table lists the 317 incorporated places in the United States with a population of at least 100,000 on July 1, 2019, as estimated by the United States Census Bureau. A city is displayed in bold if it is a state or federal capital, and in italics if it is the most populous city in the state. Five states—Delaware, Maine, Vermont, West Virginia and Wyoming—have no cities with populations of 100,000 or more.
The table below contains the following information:

The city rank by population as of July 1, 2019, as estimated by the United States Census Bureau[1]

Cities formerly over 100,000 people

The following table lists U.S. cities that, in past censuses, have had populations of at least 100,000 but have since decreased beneath this threshold or have been consolidated with or annexed into a neighboring city.

The table below contains the following information:

Name of city

Name of state

The city population as of July 1, 2019, as estimated by the United States Census Bureau[1]

The city's peak population based on highest official enumeration recorded by the Census (and the year of that particular Census)

The numeric decline in population from its peak Census count to the most recent Census estimate in 2018.

The percent decline in population from its peak Census count to the most recent Census estimate in 2018.

^Nashville is a consolidated city-county. The population given is for the entire city-county, excluding other incorporated places lying within the city-county limits. (See Nashville-Davidson (balance), Tennessee). As of 2010, the population of the city-county including other incorporated places was 626,681.

^After approval by local voters in a 2012 referendum, the City of Macon, Georgia merged with most of unincorporated Bibb County, Georgia on January 1, 2014. The new consolidated government is officially "Macon-Bibb County."

^Jurupa Valley was incorporated as a city on July 1, 2011, from various portions of unincorporated territory in Riverside County, California. Because of this, there is no official 2010 Census population.

^The population of all North Side neighborhoods of Pittsburgh (41,120), plus Census Tract 4270 Blocks 2 & 3, which are the sections of Millvale, Pennsylvania that were formally part of Allegheny City. (an additional 2,301), which totals to 43,421. All data from the 2010 Census.

^The population for Brooklyn in the 2010 Census was 2,504,700. However, since Brooklyn is now a borough of the City of New York and thus no longer its own separate city, for the purposes of this chart, its current population will be regarded as negligible.